I identified it with its meaning, and then understood its meaning, which comes from "History of the Ming Dynasty".
Translation: I judge and distinguish based on the meaning of the text (where should there be a pause), and then I understand the main idea of ??"Book of Books".
Original text: Chen Jitai, courtesy name Dashi, was born in Linchuan. My family was poor, I couldn't study as a teacher, and I didn't have any books, so I would read books from other places and read them in secret. I got the "Shu Jing" from my cousin. The four corners had been wiped out and there were no sentences to read. I identified it with its meaning and understood its meaning. When he was ten years old, he saw the Book of Songs in his wife's medicine cage, took it and ran away quickly. When my father saw it, he was angry and took him to the field. He took him to the field and sat on a high hill, so he never forgot it. After a long time, he returned to Linchuan and became famous all over the world with the Nanying generation. He was very dexterous in writing. He could write twenty or thirty poems a day, and he had written up to ten thousand poems successively. No one can be as wealthy as Ji Tai.
Chen Jitai (1567-1641), courtesy name Dashi and nickname Fangcheng, was born in Chenfang Village, Pengtian, Linchuan, Jiangxi. An ancient writer in the late Ming Dynasty. One of the "Four Great Talents in Linchuan". His father Yisheng, named Xiyuan, lived in Wuping, Tingzhou, Fujian, where he was a teacher. Chen Jitai was born there. In the seventh year of Chongzhen (1634), Chen Jitai was awarded Jinshi at the age of 68 and was appointed as a pedestrian.
Chen Jitai has a quick mind and writes extremely fast. Sometimes he can write twenty or thirty articles a day, and he can write up to ten thousand articles in his life. History books say that he was "unparalleled in his wealth through life and career". He is highly accomplished in eight-part essay. He integrated classics, history and ancient books, found his own way, used topics to express his views, recruited talents and expressed his own opinions, and was known as the master of eight-legged essays.
"History of the Ming Dynasty" is the last of the Twenty-Four Histories, with a total of 332 volumes, including 24 volumes of chronicles, 75 volumes of chronicles, and 220 volumes of biographies. Thirteen volumes. It is a biographical history that records more than 200 years of history from the first year of Hongwu by Zhu Yuanzhang (AD 1368) to the seventeenth year of Chongzhen by Zhu Youjian (AD 1644). Its volume is second only to "History of the Song Dynasty" among the Twenty-Four Histories, and its long and diligent compilation greatly exceeds previous histories. Although "History of the Ming Dynasty" has some hidden features, it has still been widely praised by later historians. Zhao Yi said in Volume 31 of "Notes on the Twenty-Two Histories": "Except for Ouyang Gong's "History of the Five Dynasties", "History of the Liao" is brief, "History of the Song" is complex, "History of the Yuan" is careless, and "History of the Jin" The writing is elegant and clean, and the narrative is concise and somewhat impressive, but it is not as complete as the "History of the Ming Dynasty".
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